Friday, 27 April 2018

A relatively common error with plugins is "Request for the permission of type 'System.Security.Permissions.SecurityPermission, mscorlib, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089' failed". This is the general message that you get when you have a plugin registered in the sandbox, and it is trying to do something that is not permitted. You may get variations on this error, depending on exactly what the code is trying to do, for example:

Call the CRM IOrganizationService using the context passed to the plugin

Access remote web resources as long as you:

Use http or https

Use a domain name, not an IP address

Do not use the .Net classes for authentication

All of which is pretty restrictive, but is understandable given the sandbox is designed to protect the CRM server. To me, the most annoying one is the last, which makes it pretty much impossible to call other Microsoft web services directly, such as SharePoint or Reporting Services.

So, what to do about it. If you have CRM OnPremise, the simple and only solution is to register the assembly outside the sandbox, so that it can run in FullTrust - i.e. do whatever it wants (though still subject to the permissions of the CRM service account or asynchronous service account that it runs under).

And if you've got CRM Online, then the normal solution is to offload the processing to an environment that you have more control over. The most common option is to offload the processing to Azure, using the Azure Service Bus or Azure Event Hub . The alternative, new to CRM 9, is to send the data to a WebHook, which can be hosted wherever you like.

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Who I am

Professionally:I'm a founder member of Excitation Ltd, a Microsoft Gold Partner in the UK that specializes in Microsoft CRM, and I've been the technical lead in over 50 CRM implementations since the release of CRM 1.2.This is a personal blog, and any views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of Excitation; sometimes they will, but that should be treated as a happy coincidence rather than a normal state of affairs.

Personally: We'll see if I get onto this in the blog; if so, I expect it will include some permutation of mountains, snow and gravity